Installing HP-UX 11.0 and Updating HP-UX 10.x to 11.0 HP 9000 Computers Edition 1

242 Appendix C
Ignite-UX System Administration
Section 2: The Install Archive
This will cause the target system to boot a copy of the Ignite-UX kernel
and file system that bootsys copies to the target. An icon representing
the system will appear in the Ignite-UX user interface on the server
when the system has completed boot. (This may take several minutes.)
Only booted clients will appear as icons.
If the server cannot resolve the system name, you can specify to bootsys
the system_name and ip-address using following syntax:
# /opt/ignite/bin/bootsys -w -v <system_name:ip-address>
Method 2):
If this is a new system (or running pre-9.X HP-UX): Manually reboot the
system. Interrupt the boot process and select the Ignite-UX server as the
lan boot source. This command will be slightly different depending on the
H/W you are installing on. As an example, to install to a 712, type the
following after you are in the boot admin mode:
> boot lan.15.2.72.150 install
Older S700’s that use the RMP (rbootd) protocol instead of BOOTP
require that you use the Ethernet address of the server, and not specify
the “install” keyword:
> boot lan.080009-123456
(Replace the above IP/Ethernet addresses with the correct value for your
Ignite-UX server).
Step 4: Install the OS Archive on the Target
In this section, we will use the Ignite-UX user interface to customize an
OS install. In Section 3, we will discuss how this can be done with no
user/administrator interaction.
Run the Ignite-UX user interface by executing the following as root:
# /opt/ignite/bin/ignite
When the target has rebooted (using the bootsys command or manual
reboot), and is ready for installation, it will appear as an icon, labeled
either as its original hostname (if rebooted using bootsys), or by the
hostname supplied by DHCP, or at the console.
Step 4.1:
Highlight the icon of the system you wish to install.
Step 4.2: